Ja Rule has spoken publicly about a confrontation aboard a commercial flight involving Tony Yayo and Uncle Murda, an episode that quickly made its way across social media. In a written statement, he acknowledged regret over how he handled the moment. “I’m not proud of my behavior it’s goofy to me. I’m a grown man about to be a grandfather and I wish that video of me wasn’t out there either. I don’t like people taking me out of my character so for that I apologize to my wife, family, fans, business and investment partners,” he wrote. He added, “I want people to know at the end of the day I’m still a man and I’m going to stand my ground. I don’t start trouble.”
Appearing later on The TODAY Show, Ja Rule broadened the conversation to responsibility and example. “There’s a responsibility that we have to be gentlemen. I live by a code, I call it the gentleman’s code, but I’m also raising young men. So, you have to let them know that there’s no room for disrespect, but also that there’s a way to carry yourself. So, two things can be true,” he said. The tone suggested reflection rather than escalation, though he did not signal any effort to repair relations with G-Unit.
In an interview with TMZ, he spoke more philosophically about rivalry. “Sometimes in life, people have enemies, and that’s okay. That’s okay to have enemies. Everybody can’t be friends. A friend of a friend of everybody is an enemy to himself. But what I’m saying is, we don’t also have to be at war. There’s room for us to be not friends and also not be at war. That’s where I’m at with it right now. I don’t deal with that side. I don’t fck with them; they don’t fck with me. That’s fine. But I also don’t have to be at war.” It was less a peace offering than a statement of boundaries.
Old Rivalries, New Turbulence
Tony Yayo responded in an interview with XXL, writing off the episode as part of a rivalry that has simply endured. “We grown but war never dies just gets old. #qgtm [money bad emojis] they was never outside @nojumper,” he said. 50 Cent, G-Unit’s founder, added his own commentary on Instagram: “Good morning let your enemies become motivation. Make them watch your success till they snap. Then get the Fvck out the way before they crash out. LOL.”
The dispute reportedly unfolded when the artists found themselves on the same flight, leading to raised voices before Ja Rule was escorted off the plane. Though brief, the incident revived a feud that has shaped parts of hip-hop history for more than two decades. What remains now is not open warfare but a familiar distance, maintained in interviews and social posts rather than in songs.


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